{"id":26512,"date":"2013-07-27T12:50:43","date_gmt":"2013-07-27T16:50:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/static\/?p=26512"},"modified":"2013-07-28T07:59:20","modified_gmt":"2013-07-28T11:59:20","slug":"the-science-of-wind-turbine-syndrome-part-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/2013\/the-science-of-wind-turbine-syndrome-part-2\/","title":{"rendered":"The Science of Wind Turbine Syndrome: Part 2"},"content":{"rendered":"

Editor’s note<\/em>: \u00a0Eric Bibler wrote the following as an “open letter” to Heather Goldstone, Science Editor of a Cape Cod (Mass.) radio station that happens to be an affiliate of National Public Radio (NPR). \u00a0He takes her to task for, evidently, routinely dismissing\u00a0Wind Turbine Syndrome as so much moonshine. \u00a0(If you haven’t read \u00a0Curt Devlin’s “The Science of Wind Turbine Syndrome: \u00a0Part 1<\/a>,” you should. \u00a0Bibler bases his remarks on Devlin’s article.)<\/p>\n

It’s our understanding that Goldstone holds a PhD degree (believe it or not!) from MIT. \u00a0In marine biology (we think). \u00a0Ostensibly, this qualifies her as a scientist, though not a clinician. \u00a0There is another point to be made about Goldstone. \u00a0Her husband, on the faculty at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, is a member of the Falmouth Board of Health—a board that for the longest time dismissed WTS as—once again—moonshine.<\/p>\n

Looks like a Goldstone family habit.<\/p>\n

\"gold_bar_by_kwant\"<\/p>\n

To<\/strong>: \u00a0Heather Goldstone,\u00a0Science Editor,\u00a0WCAI\u00a0National Public Radio
\nFrom<\/strong>: \u00a0Eric Bibler, Rhode Island
\nDate<\/strong>: \u00a0July 25, 2013<\/p>\n

Re.\u00a0\u201cThe Science of Wind Turbine Syndrome\u201d: The real gold standard of science is not \u201cpeer review\u201d; it\u2019s something called \u201creproducibility<\/a>\u201d<\/p>\n

.<\/span>
\nDear Ms. Goldstone,<\/p>\n

I am writing to provide you with a copy of a recent essay by Mr. Curt Devlin regarding a dangerous fallacy that has been repeatedly promoted by you, and others, regarding the true nature of the scientific method.<\/p>\n

The essay, which refers to you by name, explains in plain English why the obsession with “peer reviewed” studies is nothing more than a ploy used by the wind energy industry — and its sympathizers — to create an artificial and illegitimate standard of “evidence of harm” from wind turbines whose practical effect — and obvious intent — is to dismiss the torrent of evidence from all over the world that demonstrates, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that these adverse impacts are occurring on a global scale.<\/p>\n

I, too, have long been troubled by your dismissive public remarks concerning the research of Dr. Nina Pierpont’s book, “Wind Turbine Syndrome.”<\/p>\n

Specifically, I have been amazed that someone with your training should continue to insist this work is (a) “not peer reviewed,” and (b) that the gold standard of science is peer review.<\/p>\n

In the first instance, it seems that you have not even bothered to read Dr. Pierpont’s book. If you had, you would have discovered, to your shock and amazement, that the work was actually read in advance of publication by a distinguished group of medical doctors, including clinicians, epidemiologists and other medical researchers, all of whom found merit in the work. And if you had bothered to dig a little deeper, you would find that many other distinguished scientists who read the book after its publication (and considered the quality of the research) had commented favorably on its contribution to knowledge.<\/p>\n

Such minimal research would not seem like too much to ask of someone who regularly reports on science for the National Public Radio.<\/p>\n

\"dunce-cap\"<\/p>\n

In the second instance, it is a source of constant dismay that you fail to understand the simple point that Mr. Devlin makes in his essay — namely, that peer review isn’t really worth a damn, other than acting as a screen to publication in various journals.<\/p>\n

As you know, scientists offer competing hypotheses all the time to explain events around us, including medical phenomena that make their presence known through the assertion of symptoms without immediately revealing all of the intricate details of the mechanisms that produce the symptoms. In other words, the effects are always appreciated, first; only later — typically after a considerable amount of hard work and ingenuity are brought to bear — are the causes of those effects completely comprehended.<\/p>\n

As the Science Editor at NPR, surely you must be able to appreciate that his is how we came to achieve a detailed understanding of every disease or medical illness on earth, including malaria, polio, mercury poisoning and mesothelioma (from exposure to asbestos).<\/p>\n

The gold standard of science is “TRUTH” — not the “truthiness” of “peer review,” which is subject to all of the distorting and falsifying influences enumerated by Mr. Devlin — all of which are familiar and well-understood by every practicing scientist.<\/p>\n

As Mr. Devlin cogently explains, the way we verify the “truth” of any scientific hypothesis is through “reproducibility” — not through “peer review.”<\/p>\n

\"Tire-tracks-300x197\"<\/p>\n

As Mr. Devlin explains, “peer review” is just an opinion; “reproducibility is where the rubber meets the road.<\/p>\n

If scientists of all persuasions are able to reproduce the findings of a study, that adds credibility to the accuracy of the hypothesis; conversely, if other scientists — such as the paid shills of the wind energy industry and sympathetic science editors — are unable to contradict the findings of the original study, this also confers credibility on the conclusions of the study.<\/p>\n

\"fake<\/p>\n

I regret to inform you, Ms. Goldstone, that “peer review” is only the “Goldstone Standard” — and not the “gold standard” — of science. Nothing more, nothing less. And that the “Goldstone Standard” of science is a rather pathetic and misguided one, at that.<\/p>\n

Please also consider — in this context of our mutual quest for the truth about the adverse health impacts from industrial wind turbines — that you and your like-minded cohorts in the wind industry have regularly sneered at first person testimonials from the victims of these installations, haughtily dismissing them as “anecdotal” and “unscientific” — and therefore largely irrelevant, according to you.<\/p>\n

You habitually and sanctimoniously dismiss all of this information, notwithstanding the fact that these testimonials and the pattern of adverse health impacts that are reported are eerily similar — virtually identical — regardless of where they come from.<\/p>\n

All of the complainants share the following circumstances, regardless of what country or continent they inhabit:<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0They live in relatively close proximity to newly installed wind turbines.<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0They were doing fine before the wind turbines arrived.<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0They are profoundly disturbed — sometimes physically ill — while the wind turbines are operating.<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0Their symptoms disappear — or greatly alleviated — when the turbines stop operating or when they remove themselves to a safe distance.<\/p>\n

\"nausea\"<\/p>\n

Even though there are literally THOUSANDS of these reports from residents located on six continents describing the same pattern of symptoms — and the same cause and effect — this is not “scientific” enough for you.<\/p>\n

You want them to tell their symptoms to a scientist who will diligently record all this information as “data.” \u00a0God knows where you think that money for this exercise will come from, with no profit potential for anyone. \u00a0And if the victims hired their own researcher, you would doubtless declare the results to be “biased” — and dismiss them as “invalid.”<\/p>\n

Then you want some OTHER group of scientist to review the “data” — the description of the symptoms that have been described by the victims and diligently recorded by the researcher — and to bless it as worthy of publication.<\/p>\n

Only then will the “data” be considered to satisfy the “Goldstone Standard” of excellence — and be credible to anyone, in your view.<\/p>\n

Do you not understand the absurdity of dismissing thousands and thousands of first-person accounts in this way, based on the idea that it is “not credible” unless it is “peer reviewed” by the editors of some medical journal?<\/p>\n

Let me try to explain this to you a different way.<\/p>\n

I am not a trained scientist — at least no beyond a typical high school education in the subject. But I am a practicing Emergency Medical Technician (EMT).<\/p>\n

As you can appreciate, EMT’s are pretty low on the food chain in the rarefied realm of “science” that you inhabit. We respond to medical emergencies, we assess the condition of patients and provide emergency medical care to stabilize and improve their condition, and we drive them to the hospital in an ambulance for further treatment, if necessary. We’re not PhD’s and we’re not brain surgeons, but we’re trained to provide basic medical assistance that sometimes proves to be vitally important.<\/p>\n

Guess what we do when we first encounter a patient in distress: We ask them to tell us their symptoms. Why did they call 911? \u00a0What’s wrong? \u00a0What’s different? \u00a0What are they feeling?<\/p>\n

And do you know why we do this, Ms. Goldstone?<\/p>\n

Because the patient is the only source of this information!<\/p>\n

I can observe the scene of an accident. I can tell if there has been a significant “mechanism of injury” if a car has hit a tree at high speed. \u00a0I can tell if someone obviously has a broken arm. But I can’t tell if his abdomen hurts, if he is dizzy, or if he has chest pain or tingling in his legs.<\/p>\n

\"fall<\/p>\n

Do we summon a doctor with a clipboard to interview the patient and tabulate the results in a fancy spreadsheet — and wait for him to compile similar data from 50 other car crashes — before addressing the immediate problem?<\/p>\n

Do we dismiss the information we receive from the patient until some other team of scientists has had a chance to subject the first scientist’s findings to a “peer review” — the “Goldstone Standard” — to confirm our suspicion that the patient might be in serious jeopardy if we do nothing?<\/p>\n

Do we tell the patient that we’d like to believe him — that we certainly sympathize with his predicament — and that we think it’s highly possible he might be telling the truth — but, unfortunately, we can’t really do anything until the scientists all get together and publish their findings?<\/p>\n

Or do we tell him — as in the Town of Falmouth, where your husband is a member of the Board of Health — that we’d like to take him to the hospital — God knows he’s in bad shape — but the Board of Selectmen has decided to limit ambulance trips to one a day — as part of their “balancing of interests” and to save the taxpayers’ money — and, unfortunately, we already made a trip to the hospital earlier in the day — so he’ll just have to suck it up?<\/p>\n

No. We don’t do any of these things.<\/p>\n

Why?<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0Because there is only one expert on “symptoms” — and that is the patient. We cannot see or hear his symptoms. He feels them and he reports them to us.<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span> Because have no reason to doubt the patient — especially when we know that similar patients in similar circumstances are likely to report the same symptoms. Why should I be shocked if a victim in a car crash reports neck pain? Or if a diabetic is dizzy and disoriented? I know from experience that one thing leads to another — without a “peer review.”<\/p>\n

\u00bb\u00a0<\/span>Because the patient’s “first person testimonial” seems credible — particularly if the patient has no reason to lie. Am I to suspect that victims of car crashes are part of some vast global conspiracy because they report similar symptoms after the same “mechanism of injury” in the absence of a “peer review”? \u00a0Really? \u00a0Why do they do it? \u00a0How did they manage to communicate with each other and make sure they got their stories straight — time after time after time, a thousand times, in a thousand places?<\/p>\n

\"a_good_lawyer_by_rad_r-d479ao3\"<\/p>\n

The reason we don’t apply the “Goldstone Standard” and insist upon a “peer review” of this information is simple: \u00a0If we did, we would have a lot of dead and dying patients. \u00a0People would be in agony, walking around with broken arms. \u00a0Or in a diabetic coma. \u00a0Or suffering anaphylactic shock from an acute allergic reaction. \u00a0Or experiencing the initial stages or the warning signs of an imminent heart attack — while we all awaited the “peer review” of our initial assessment.<\/p>\n

It’s the same with “wind turbine syndrome” — a simple term which you, and others, love to ridicule and dismiss. \u00a0This is a straightforward reference to “a concurrence of symptoms” that tend to occur in people who live too close to wind turbines. \u00a0No brainer.<\/p>\n

How do we know this? \u00a0Because the victims report this same “concurrence of symptoms” — or some variation thereof — over and over and over again in the presence of wind turbines.<\/p>\n

How did Dr. Pierpont discover this? \u00a0She contacted a wind turbine site and asked the residents to describe their symptoms. Then she recorded the results of these “first person testimonials” — as they were described to a scientist. \u00a0She then organized and compiled them in a manner that passed “peer review” with flying colors (fulfilling the rigorous terms of the “Goldstone Standard”). \u00a0Then she published them to alert the world that she thought there was a burgeoning problem that merited our attention — and further study.<\/p>\n

As Curt Devlin notes, Dr. Pierpont also called attention to the limitations of her study — primarily the modest sample size — and invited others to “reproduce” her studies to validate the truth of her findings.<\/p>\n

In fact, other researchers have validated her findings, and no researcher has invalidated her conclusions.<\/p>\n

We can go further. \u00a0There is a growing consensus — even at the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (which never laid eyes on a wind turbine project it couldn’t love, including proposals to install 500-foot wind turbines less than 600 feet from residences in Eastham and Bourne); and even at the Massachusetts Department of Environmental “Protection”, headed by Ken Kimmell, author of the ill-fated Wind Energy Siting Reform Act to ram wind turbines down the throats of recalcitrant communities and who engineered the infamous MA DEP sham science study — that wind turbines cause serious adverse health impacts<\/em>.<\/p>\n

\"hands_raised_0-1\"<\/p>\n

Why? \u00a0Largely because it is increasingly difficult — if not impossible — to ignore the voices of thousands of people who have suffered the direct consequences of these installations — the patients whose symptoms even you will one day grudgingly acknowledge — no doubt with a wistful sigh, saying: \u00a0“If only we had had the peer-reviewed studies then that we have today, we could have avoided this whole problem.”<\/p>\n

Although the main reason is that sooner or later, with or without a “peer review” and with or without any reference to the “Goldstone Standard,” the truth always asserts itself.<\/p>\n

I hope you don’t mind that I am circulating this letter to some of your peers in the press who, like you, regularly report on wind energy in Massachusetts. \u00a0I will also be posting it on the same website where Curt Devlin published his critique of the fundamental bankruptcy of your religious devotion to the concept of “peer review” — even as you ignore the immense weight of evidence right in front of you on this important subject.<\/p>\n

I hope that you will take the opportunity to respond, so that we can all gain a better understanding of your point of view, and that you will post your response on the same website for the benefit of all.<\/p>\n

Sincerely,<\/p>\n

\"Eric<\/p>\n

Note<\/em>: \u00a0None of the opinions expressed above have been “peer reviewed.”<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

\"Eric

Eric Bibler<\/p><\/div>\n

 <\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

Editor’s note: \u00a0Eric Bibler wrote the following as an “open letter” to Heather Goldstone, Science Editor of a Cape Cod (Mass.) radio station that happens to be an affiliate of National Public Radio (NPR). \u00a0He takes her to task for, evidently, routinely dismissing\u00a0Wind Turbine Syndrome as so much moonshine. \u00a0(If you haven’t read \u00a0Curt Devlin’s “The Science of Wind Turbine Syndrome: \u00a0Part 1,” you should. \u00a0Bibler bases his remarks on Devlin’s article.) It’s our understanding that Goldstone holds a PhD degree (believe it or not!) from MIT. \u00a0In marine biology (we think). \u00a0Ostensibly, this qualifies her as a scientist, though not a clinician. \u00a0There is another point to be made about Goldstone. \u00a0Her husband, on the faculty at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, is a member of the Falmouth Board of Health—a board that for the longest time dismissed WTS as—once again—moonshine. Looks like a Goldstone family habit. To: \u00a0Heather Goldstone,\u00a0Science Editor,\u00a0WCAI\u00a0National Public Radio From: \u00a0Eric Bibler, Rhode Island Date: \u00a0July 25, 2013 Re.\u00a0\u201cThe Science of Wind Turbine Syndrome\u201d: The real gold standard of science is not \u201cpeer review\u201d; it\u2019s something called \u201creproducibility\u201d . Dear Ms. Goldstone, I am writing to provide you with a copy of a recent essay by Mr. Curt Devlin regarding a dangerous fallacy that has been repeatedly promoted by you, and others, regarding the true nature of the scientific method. The essay, which refers to you by name, explains in plain English why the obsession with “peer reviewed” studies is nothing more than a ploy used by the wind energy industry — and its sympathizers — to create an artificial and illegitimate standard of “evidence of harm” from wind turbines whose practical effect — and obvious intent — is to dismiss the torrent of evidence from all over the world that demonstrates, beyond a shadowRead More…<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[157,163,16],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/26512"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=26512"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/26512\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=26512"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=26512"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=26512"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}